The bells of Kyle Rudolph's ice cream cart rang over a Lake Street parking lot, chimes summoning a south Minneapolis community stripped of many grocery stores and pharmacies following the aftermath of George Floyd's death in police custody.
Hundreds were served food and essential goods from diapers to dish soap Friday afternoon next to a heavily damaged Target and Cub Foods, where prominent Twin Cities sports figures volunteered to resupply neighborhoods in need as part of a grassroots campaign.
A Vikings virtual meeting on Monday led to a conversation about how to help, according to defensive end Danielle Hunter, who joined five teammates, Wolves guard Josh Okogie and coach Ryan Saunders and Gophers football coach P.J. Fleck, among others, at the pop-up supply station not far from the epicenter of many protests.
"Everyone needs to do their part," Hunter said. "We were just talking about how this is our community — our backyard. We needed to help."
Music brought dancing in front of loudspeakers. Nearby residents had medical needs evaluated at a tent with licensed pharmacists and medical professionals. Hunter, Fleck and employees from the Vikings, Wolves and Gophers carried full bags to cars and unloaded donations from others. Vikings center Garrett Bradbury and guard Dakota Dozier spent hours preparing food kits in paper bags.
About "50 to 100" volunteers were organized or simply showed up, according to Justin Hall, who befriended Rudolph through the U's Masonic Children's Hospital. Hall and his sister, Kirsten Castillo, organized the event with Rudolph. The supply station became a priority after Rudolph and his teammates drove around south Minneapolis.
They first wanted to help shovel debris and clear sidewalks, but much of that work was underway.
"So, we were out asking what's the biggest need? How can we help?" Rudolph said. "As we stand here in the Cub parking lot, where this community would come and get its essential goods, it's under construction. They're putting it back together. To have a place where they can come get all this stuff was the bigger need."